viernes, noviembre 23, 2007

Personas "no identificadas" sabotearon los TGV franceses:

Coordinated acts of sabotage struck France's high-speed trains, causing further delays to services already widely disrupted by strikes, just as talks were opening Wednesday to coax unions into ending their walkout.

The national SNCF rail authority stopped short of blaming strikers for the overnight vandalism, which it said included the burning of electric cables and damage to signaling systems. Labor unions quickly denied any connection.

Nevertheless, the attacks added a new note of ill will before talks Wednesday between unions and the companies worst hit by the strike — the Paris transit authority and the SNCF.

The SNCF called the vandalism a "coordinated sabotage campaign." The boss of the powerful CGT union, Bernard Thibault, condemned the attacks but also suggested they may have been designed to discredit the strike movement.

Train drivers, Paris Metro employees and certain other public employees have been staying off the job to protest President Nicolas Sarkozy's plan to trim their retirement benefits.

Sarkozy appears to have the upper hand in the test of strength with powerful transport unions: Opinion polls show the public strongly supports the president, and strikers have been trickling back to work on subway and long-distance trains.

More worrying, vandals late on Tuesday crept out on to the tracks carrying high-speed trains from Paris to the Atlantic coast and set fire to cables running under the rails. The sabotage, by so far unidentified parties, has added an element of fear that threatens to complicate further efforts to negotiate a solution to the dispute.

almost 70 percent of those surveyed said the strike was unjustified and the government should not back down from its efforts to eliminate special retirement privileges that allow transit workers to retire in their 50s.